Xi Plays his Trump Card in India

Late in his first term as India’s Prime Minister Narenda Modi has seen a dramatic shift in India’s economic, energy and military relationships with China and the United States. The recent developments are a massive departure from India’s position less than six months ago when India was at odds with China. Mr. Modi has been the indirect beneficiary of the Trump Administration’s failure to join the Transatlantic Trade Partnership, threats of a trade war with China, discord over Chinese interference with Freedom of Navigation patrols by the United States in the South China Sea, the absence of any U.S. diplomatic relations with Russia, and having destroyed the trustworthy leadership the world has come to expect from the United States Commander in Chief.

Background

Once upon a time China, Russia and India appeared to have forged an unbreakable alliance. It started on July 17, 2014 with the announcement of The BRICS or New Development Bank, which also included South Africa and Brasil as founding members. There were statements made at the time that the intention was to devalue the dollar and the Euro and speculation as to whether China would demand repayment of that portion of the American debt that it held.

As if that were not enough for the Western world to process, on February 2, 2015 China, along with Russia, two of the five permanent United Nations Security Council (UNSC) members, issued a statement supporting India’s longstanding bid to become one of the five permanent UNSC members.

Based on its large population, India has long felt deprived of recognition as a global leader in any domain, most acutely in the United Nations. India’s population is 17.4 percent of the global population. Combined with China, the two countries represent 37.4 percent of the world’s population. India’s population is 1,296,834,042, just below China’s population of 1,384,688,986, both of which are four times more populated than the United States, which has a population of 329,256,465.

Assuming significant restructuring of the United Nations Charter by the General Assembly and the UNSC, this would mean that India would usurp either Great Britain, France or the United States as a permanent UNSC member.

The statement issued by Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi further declared that the three nations, with China at the helm, would “build a more just, fair and stable international political and economic order” and a “multi-polar world,” stating that “We advocate the principle of partnership rather than alliance.”

These plans unraveled in 2017.

Following a year of strained diplomatic relations, including a military stand-off at the shared Doklam border, and a growing Chinese threat in the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal, China and India are once again doing business together – and on a very large scale.

The Disparate Economic Realities

Just days after a high-level U.S. summit with Mr. Modi, the delegation headed to Beijing brandishing threats of stiff tariffs on Chinese exports to America signaling the beginning of a trade war with strategic implications extending well beyond the China–United States bilateral relationship. So President Xi Jinping played his trump card and immediately began forging relations with India and other countries, including one of America’s strongest allies – Japan.

While India and China are both considered developing countries by the World Bank, China has parlayed its economic resources into a series of initiatives extending beyond Asia into Europe, including the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank and the One Belt, One Road initiative to link China with countries as far afield as Europe. China is now the second-largest economy in the world by GDP and poised to overtake the United States as the largest economy over the next few years. Major credit agencies, give China a near perfect score — close to that of the United States — and India a near junk score.

Conversely, India is dependent upon outside funding in order to develop a sustainable infrastructure, including jobs, housing and security. At 67% of its GDP, India’s gross general government debt is higher than that of most other major Asian economies, save Japan.

India is the largest recipient of loans from the World Bank, amounting to $102.1 billion, between 1945 and 2015.

Sign Up For Our Newsletter

Follow US

Despite its relatively passive nature, India is a global military power having joined the U.S. and China as one of the world’s five biggest military spenders. New Delhi’s defense spending rose by 5.5 percent to $63.9 billion in 2017 surpassing France, according to a May 2018 Stockholm International Peace Research Institute report. However, most of its budget is spent on salaries and pensions, not on acquiring weapons or technology. The one weapon India possesses are nuclear weapons.

The New Sino-India Partnership

A state-run Chinese bank, the ICBC Credit Suisse Asset Management Co., announced a public offering of the China’s first India-dedicated publicly offered investment fund, saying the Indian market offers an excellent opportunity for Chinese investors due to the prospects of double-digit growth.

According to Chinese state media, “The fund, named the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) Credit Suisse India Market Fund, will “invest in exchange-traded funds listed on more than 20 exchanges in Europe and the US that are based on the Indian market.”

This is precisely the financial boost India requires to get recently announced initiatives off the ground. India has unveiled a series of programs to give a boost to infrastructure development across the country, with a focus on 100 “Smart Cities.” This involves significant improvements to its weak infrastructure, including the energy sector, all facets of its economic corridors, and constructing more airports and ports. All totaled, if realized, this could tremendously boost India’s gross domestic product.

As Mr. Modi’s internal approval ratings have sunk to a new low a year before elections, the recent developments, especially if the populace sees tangible progress, may be enough to keep Mr. Modi in office. However, the 2018 Forbes list of the 10 most powerful people in the world now ranks Mr. Modi as ninth. President Xi Jinping has overtaken Russian Federation President Vladimir Putin as the most influential person. President Donald Trump ranked third.

In return, China benefits in countless ways. First, India controls China’s maritime access to the juncture of the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea near the Malacca Strait, part of India’s Exclusive Economic Zone under UNCLOS, through which more than 80% of Chinese fuel supplies pass.

Second, India was the second greatest security threat to China. Yin Guoming, a Chinese foreign affairs analyst, argued that India, and not Japan, has now become the second biggest threat to China after the United States, “[The] China-India standoff has compelled us to regard India as a serious rival.

During the Dong Lang [or Doklam] confrontation, it became very clear to everyone – from ordinary Chinese to foreign policy experts – China must reckon India to be its second biggest rival and that China needs to re-assess, re-examine, and reformulate its India strategy.”

The converse view is that since independence India has only sought to preserve its territorial lands, refraining from engaging in the many armed conflicts and exhibiting no evidence of aspirations for territorial expansion. Sanjeev Nayyar, an independent columnist, in April 2017, opined that, “One thing China must understand is that the Indian government is not obsessed with being a threat to China but only wants a rightful place for India in the world.”

Now, rather than having to neutralize India by encircling it with its Asian allies: Pakistan, Burma, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and the Maldives, China has another partner to the detriment of the United States and even Russia.